Word: panelists
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...know of no cases in which the Krishna movement sought to control the minds of its members," Jeremiah Gutman, civil liberties attorney in the New York case and a panelist, said yesterday...
...Michigan State, was widely shared: "I wish I had a prepared sheet of facts. Carter would say one thing and Ford would say another. They can't both be right." At the University of California at Berkeley, Lester Antman, 19, had no difficulty picking a winner. His choice: Panelist Elizabeth Drew. Many students thought they could have done better than either man. Declared University of Virginia Sophomore David Barol: "Ford's attack on Congress was a strong point. I can't understand why Carter didn't point out Ford had been in Congress 25 years and done nothing...
...could toss a coin to see who starts off and then let them go at each other." Adds Journalism Professor Edward P. Bassett of the University of Southern California: "All that's needed is an interlocutor who can keep them at each other's throat." But another panelist, New Yorker Correspondent Elizabeth Drew, disagrees. Says she: "At least we had the opportunity to inject reality. I don't think it would be too good to have Ford saying, 'Jimmy, is it true you want to increase spending to the sky?' Or Carter asking...
...week's end, television network executives and sponsors were still squabbling over ground rules, and CBS threatened not to telecast the debate, apparently because a correspondent was rejected as a panelist. All three networks said they might not cover the debate unless audience reaction shots are permitted. A court challenge this week by minor party candidates also could threaten the debate...
...Sunday Times in 1966 and editor in 1967. Short and slight, he still speaks with flat Yorkshire vowels and spends his few hours out of the Sunday Times office toiling almost obsessively at squash, skiing, Ping Pong and a book on photojournalism. He also serves as an occasional panelist on a television quiz show titled, aptly enough, Call My Bluff. Evans has long argued that British journalism should end its preoccupation with the elegant expression of opinion and tackle more American-style investigative reporting. "The growing power of government and corporations has led to a great invasion of personal privacy...